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Dell Inspiron 13 7000 2-in-1 Laptop (i7-10510U, 8GB RAM, 512GB NVMe SSD) $1519 Delivered @ Dell

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10th Generation Intel® Core™ i7-10510U Processor (8MB Cache, up to 4.9 GHz)

Windows 10 Home (64 bit) English

Intel® UHD Graphics with shared graphics memory

8GB, LPDDR3, 2133MHz

512GB M.2 PCIe NVMe Solid State Drive
JB Selling at $2000 ATM
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closed Comments

  • why pair latest intel CPU with ancient ram

    • +6

      Lddr3 is very cheap to make nowadays and also very low energy consumption. Normally who buys a notebook /tablet like that expect a long baterry life. Also as you can see from the memory speed it can run at 2133 MHz witch for a day usage is not bad and imperceptible.
      That's some reason to why.

      • -1

        I don't get it! there's 10th generation Intel CPU, there's DDR4 widely available, sure i7 supports DDR4.. that brings me back to original question, why pair latest hot off the press Intel CPU with old LPDDR3?

        • +3

          I will try again.
          "DDR4 RAM stands for Double Data Rate 4 Random Access Memory. It consumes more power than DDR3 RAM and it speeds upto 2400 MHz. Currently there is no low power version of DDR4 RAM. As laptop of 8 GB RAM is considered, LPDDR3 RAM increases the stand-by time of laptop while DDR4 RAM focuses on faster loading of softwares"

          • -5

            @MDSUXKS: ok I will call you an expert on outdated hardware then! because I haven't held a model configured with anything other than DDR4 for a year and a half at least.

            if LPDDR3 were so good why haven't I seen any business grade hardware configured with it for a while now.

            even crappy Latitude 3190 that you would normally give away to homeless, or even ancient 7th generation Intel CPU equipped (I am talking i5-7200U here) Latitudes came configured with DDR4-2400.

            but fine, consumer grade hardware market confuses me, I shouldn't even look at these listings to avoid frustration.

            • +3

              @[Deactivated]: I agree with you. I'm not a expert but I worked before a technical pre sales at HP few years ago. As you mentioned this is a consumer line a quite expesive one. And people like battery also the difference between 2133 and 2400 MHz is not noticiable. However maybe they bought a lot of this memories for a very cheap price and now they can increase their margin. But I totally agree with you on all your points.

  • -2

    DDR3. Lol.

  • Alternatively you could get this instead. Has DDR4, is cheaper ($1399) and has bigger screen (but less HDD and inferior processor)

    • Was actually looking at this before I got the 13 7000 due to its weight

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